Validation of remote sensing and weather model forecasts in the Agulhas ocean area to 57°S by ship observations

South African Journal of Science

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Validation of remote sensing and weather model forecasts in the Agulhas ocean area to 57°S by ship observations
 
Creator Messager, Christophe Faure, Vincent
 
Subject Earth Sciences numerical weather forecast; Agulhas Retroflection; air–sea fluxes; ocean wind; remote sensing
Description The region south of South Africa, encompassing the Agulhas Current and Retroflection, and part of the Southern Ocean, is known for its severe meteorological conditions. Because of these conditions, in-situ observations are rare. Consequently, remote-sensing satellite observations and high-resolution regional weather forecasts at the ocean surface are difficult to assess. However, atmospheric data collected in the southern hemisphere summer of 2008 during the International Polar Year-BONUS-GoodHope campaign were used to validate two satellite data sets: the twice daily QuikSCAT winds and the daily OAflux data set of latent and sensible heat fluxes. The surface winds and heat fluxes forecasts produced by a regional atmospheric model were also assessed along the ship track. In this study, we have shown that the two data sets exhibited a very good accordance with daily in-situ observations. During the campaign, the correlation coefficients for wind speed and direction were 0.97 and 0.91, respectively, and those for latent and sensible heat fluxes were 0.92 and 0.90, respectively. The QuikSCAT wind speed was underestimated by 1.37 m/s relative to in-situ data, south of the Subtropical Front. Large differences in heat fluxes in both OAflux and the atmospheric model were observed when crossing the Subtropical Front and a warm eddy, as well as during a storm, when gale force winds reached more than 20 m/s. The two data sets were then used to assess the regional model forecasts over a larger area south of South Africa, not limited to the ship track. Most of the model errors were located in a region north of the Subtropical Front, where the sea surface temperature used by the model was not accurate enough to reproduce the relevant mesoscale oceanic features driving the spatial variability of the surface winds and heat fluxes. Finally, compared to in-situ and remote sensing observations, the numerical modelling weather forecast produced realistic atmospheric conditions over the sea south of the Subtropical Front.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor CNRS/INSU
Date 2012-03-09
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — In-situ observation; Modelling and remote datasets
Format application/pdf text/html application/epub+zip text/xml
Identifier 10.4102/sajs.v108i3/4.735
 
Source South African Journal of Science; Vol 108, No 3/4 (2012); 10 pages 1996-7489 0038-2353
 
Language eng
 
Relation
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https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/view/735/1078 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/view/735/1125 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/view/735/1129 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/view/735/1127 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/downloadSuppFile/735/3426 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/downloadSuppFile/735/3427 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/downloadSuppFile/735/3428 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/downloadSuppFile/735/3429 https://journals.sajs.aosis.co.za/index.php/sajs/article/downloadSuppFile/735/3430
 
Coverage Southern Africa — —
Rights Copyright (c) 2012 Christophe Messager, Vincent Faure https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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